1. Hello Everyone! Thank You All for Being Here Today, and for the Invitation

1. Hello Everyone! Thank You All for Being Here Today, and for the Invitation

1. Hello Everyone! Thank you all for being here today, and for the invitation. I’m very sorry I can’t be there in real life with you all, but I am there in spirit, and excited to talk with you all about my work. 2. My name is Liss LaFleur, and I am an interdisciplinary artist currently working out of Texas. My talk today is titled DYKE CAMP and FUTURE FEMINISM, and it is an overview of some of my ​ ​ artistic practice, influences, and inspirations. This talk will also include some pedagogical oversight, and examples of recent courses I’ve developed at the University of North Texas, where I am currently an Assistant Professor of Studio Art. 3. Before we get started, I want everyone to read a manifesto with me - outloud. Just follow along on the screen. This is titled “We Who Feel Differently” written by Carlos Motta in 2012. Build an agenda Based on the needs of Queer minorites Reject the politics of Assimilation, stop begging For tolerance Welcome the celebration of Sexual and gender diversity Demand The transformation of The system Truly desacralize Democracy and demoralize The judiciary Define our Emotional and sexual Needs on our own terms Value critical difference Instead of false equality Phew- doesn’t that feel good to say out loud? 4. If you are not familiar, Alex Motta is a Columbian artist working out of New York. Through the We Who Feel Differently project, Motta collaborated with multiple people to explore a variety ​ of problems surrounding contemporary queer and LGBT activist communities in the US and abroad. His work, like my own, proposes a performance of gender as a personal, social and ​ political opportunity rather than as a social denunciation. 5. As a new media artist, I produce work at the intersection of art, technology, and Future Feminist discourses. Through video, performance, and installation art, I question power and ​ oppression in relation to identity and image making. 6. Central to my practice is an investigation of glass, a material that I explore conceptually, ​ physically, and digitally, to reference the body in flux. Much of my work is about taking up ​ ​ space and finding community, to envision a technological future made in response to social movements, historical narratives, and political change. I grew up in a tiny Texas town called Humble, and my gateway into recognizing my own queerness and relationship with feminism was not easy -- but thankfully, it started with a healthy obsession with the Spice Girls and access to online chat communities at the birth of the internet. This was coupled with growing up in my mother’s female run stained-glass studio, where I would witness her working tirelessly as a one-woman show to cut intricate pieces of glass for very large windows and designs. 7. Aside from being raised around glass (these are all images from my mother’s studio), culturally and historically, it is an extremely interesting material. The beginnings of stained-glass date ​ back to medieval Europe from the 10th century to the 16th century. The purpose of stained-glass windows in churches was both to enhance the beauty of their setting and to inform the viewer through narrative or symbolism. Many people who would attend church were illiterate, so the visual representations of narrative played an essential role in telling stories and passing down history. 8. In 2018 I was awarded an immersive scholar fellowship from the Andrew Mellon Foundation and began developing methods to create 3D forms of virtual stained glass for new large-scale video installations. At the same time, I began researching the #metoo movement as a way to understand digital forms of feminist protest. As an Immersive Scholar, I was able to compile one of the first public libraries of data in the U.S. related to the hashtag metoo. This data later became one of the first acquisitions at the #metoo Digital Media Collection at the Schlesinger Library at Harvard, where it now resides under creative commons. Both in my practice, and in this talk, we will talk about glass in varying ways … 9. In the Lesbian Avengers Handbook from 1993, the group states (quote) “there is more to direct action than catharsis. In our postmodern age, media coverage is the message. Direct action is about getting attention -- so give them something to look at... dykes in deb gowns, slanderous slogans on banners and placards, Sapphic serenades, and flaming shrines.” ​ ​ 10. How many of you know what a serenade is? (PAUSE) According to the dictionary, a serenade is a noun-- it is a piece of music sung or played in the open air, typically by a man at night under ​ … ​ the window of his lover. ​ ​ The word serenade comes from the Latin word serenus meaning "serenity." This action, based on the webster dictionary definition, is presumably for a cis, heteronormative, male -- used as a tool to woo over a cis, female lover. If this is an effective way of expressing sentiments of affection outworldly, then why does this definition make me SO incredibly uncomfortable? In 2015, I began thinking of ways in which I could use the act of a serenade as a new form of performance. 11. The first in a series of video serenades I’ve produced is titled You Belong to Me. This large-scale, immersive, video installation replaces the physical embodiment of a body/ in space/ serenading a viewer -- with an image of a figure trapped within the digital frame. For this work, I recorded myself singing an extremely slowed version of the Duprees 1952 song You Belong to Me. My love song was to the technology, to my lover, to that moment in time as a frustrated person. 12. When installed, the video is projected through five large pieces of fringe, forcing the image to deteriorate along with the slowed lyrics of the song. This is a looping artwork, and I’ve found that when it is installed viewers return to it -- letting it linger with them in the space. We’re just going to watch an excerpt so you can get a better idea of this work in space. 13. 1.5 minutes <VIDEO EXCERPT> 14. Recently, I was commissioned by the Contemporary Art Museum of Houston to create the third serenade in this series, titled Don’t Worry Baby, and projected it onto a new collection of purple fringe. For this new work, the figure slowly lip-syncs to a remix of the Beach Boys 1964 ​ ​ pop song, “Don’t Worry Baby.” The repetitious slowing of time creates a tender and nostalgic space, holding attention, while also exploring the relationship between technology, language and identity. For this work, the color purple signifies transitions, transformations, and the space in which the masculine and feminine energies combine. With this work I am questioning; what happens when you inhabit other people’s materials (specific to this song = queer womxn embodying harmonies originally written and performed by white cis men, who were singing about their hetero loves)? How can lip synching be a form of vulnerable spoken-word performance, one that feels both familiar and foreign? What role does digital looping, or repetition, play in maintaining a state of mind for the viewer? 15. As outsiders, literally on the fringes, language fails us. So I accept our myths as facts and mine ​ ​ them for their truth. In an early video performance, titled CHATTERBOX, I created a persona, and performed directly for the camera wearing an oral prosthetic device in the form of a 3D print of my mouth. Each tooth is printed with a singular small hole. Reflecting on vagina dentata, visions of adornment on the female body, and pop music, I spend 10 minutes attempting to assemble and disassemble my mouth, threading a frying pan, colander, fork, knife, spoon, and spatula in each tooth, all while humming Leslie Gore’s 1962 hit “You Don’t Own Me.” 16. The result directly challenges a historically feminist relationship with oral hygiene, oral contraceptives, and a physical opening used as a mode of communication, pleasure, and activism. In 2017, this work was projected on the Manhattan Bridge in New York as part of Light Year 29. Throughout the night, this video serenaded the city in a public space -- outside the walls of a gallery or traditional format. I just want to show a short clip of this work before we move on: 17. 1 minute <video> 18. Camp is defined in the dictionary as: ostentatious, exaggerated, affected, theatrical; effeminate or homosexual; pertaining to, characteristic of, homosexuals. Susan Sontag was the first person ​ ​ to attempt to properly define camp, in her seminal 1964 essay “Notes on Camp.” Her approach has been debated in the 50 years that have followed, particularly in her emphasis on camp as something that is all style over content. But her initial definition of camp as a sensibility marked by artifice, stylization, exaggeration, theatricality, playfulness and irony still holds up fairly well, particularly in her announcement that the “essence of Camp is its love of ​ ​ the unnatural.” 19. When I try to explain dyke camp, people often think I mean the opposite of camp as defined by Sontag, rather than something related to it. In an early series titled GREENER PASTURES, I attempted to understand what dyke camp could be by reconfiguring my identity as a Queer cowgirl on the new frontier. The title for this series was inspired by the cowboy phrase, “A loose horse will always graze for greener pastures,” as well as a recognition of my own body as I returned to my home state of Texas.

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